David777
Well-known Member
- Location
- Silicon Valley
Support the below as it is the only way to change behaviors since police alone are overwhelmed by the large numbers of drivers who won't follow driving policies or laws unless threatened with pain. California already has traffic signal red light cameras that have successfully weathered years of legal opposition to the point they are now legally bullet proof.
https://ticketsnipers.com/ticket-resources/red-light-camera-locations-in-california
So the new bill adds to traffic camera enforcement the red light cameras began and automated license plate readers (ALPR) have continued to grow with. If it is successful given a few years of operation, one can be certain it will spread in other ways. Here in the SFBA with over 7 million people among its 9 counties, another issue is our freeways have commuter lanes where one is supposed to have multiple passengers for use. But from their inception despite several hundred dollar potential fines, there have been many solo drivers using such lanes because it is little enforced while the sad status quo in this societal era for many is cheat, lie, and manipulate, if one can get away with whatever. With California a Mecca for criminals also overwhelming police, ALPRs are also proving to be highly effective deterrent, catching such numbers of those driving in from places like Oakland that burglars and thieves are now stealing license plates to place on the stolen vehicles they use. But technology is rapidly making that tactic obsolete by matching plates to vehicle type/color.
https://walksf.org/2023/03/29/lets-win-speed-safety-cameras-with-assembly-bill-645/
snippet:
This bill would authorize, until January 1, 2032, the Cities of Los Angeles, San Jose, Oakland, Glendale, and Long Beach, and the City and County of San Francisco to establish a Speed Safety System Pilot Program if the system meets specified requirements. The bill would require a participating city or city and county to adopt a Speed Safety System Use Policy and a Speed Safety System Impact Report before implementing the program, and would require the participating city or city and county to engage in a public information campaign at least 30 days before implementation of the program, including information relating to when the systems would begin detecting violations and where the systems would be utilized. The bill would require a participating city or city and county to issue warning notices rather than notices of violations for violations detected within the first 60 calendar days of the program. The bill would also require a participating city or city and county to develop uniform guidelines for, among other things, the processing and storage of confidential information. The bill would designate all photographic, video, or other visual or administrative records, not including data about the number of violations issued or the speeds at which they were issued for, made by a system as confidential, and would only authorize public agencies to use and allow access to these records for specified purposes...
https://ticketsnipers.com/ticket-resources/red-light-camera-locations-in-california
So the new bill adds to traffic camera enforcement the red light cameras began and automated license plate readers (ALPR) have continued to grow with. If it is successful given a few years of operation, one can be certain it will spread in other ways. Here in the SFBA with over 7 million people among its 9 counties, another issue is our freeways have commuter lanes where one is supposed to have multiple passengers for use. But from their inception despite several hundred dollar potential fines, there have been many solo drivers using such lanes because it is little enforced while the sad status quo in this societal era for many is cheat, lie, and manipulate, if one can get away with whatever. With California a Mecca for criminals also overwhelming police, ALPRs are also proving to be highly effective deterrent, catching such numbers of those driving in from places like Oakland that burglars and thieves are now stealing license plates to place on the stolen vehicles they use. But technology is rapidly making that tactic obsolete by matching plates to vehicle type/color.
https://walksf.org/2023/03/29/lets-win-speed-safety-cameras-with-assembly-bill-645/
snippet:
This bill would authorize, until January 1, 2032, the Cities of Los Angeles, San Jose, Oakland, Glendale, and Long Beach, and the City and County of San Francisco to establish a Speed Safety System Pilot Program if the system meets specified requirements. The bill would require a participating city or city and county to adopt a Speed Safety System Use Policy and a Speed Safety System Impact Report before implementing the program, and would require the participating city or city and county to engage in a public information campaign at least 30 days before implementation of the program, including information relating to when the systems would begin detecting violations and where the systems would be utilized. The bill would require a participating city or city and county to issue warning notices rather than notices of violations for violations detected within the first 60 calendar days of the program. The bill would also require a participating city or city and county to develop uniform guidelines for, among other things, the processing and storage of confidential information. The bill would designate all photographic, video, or other visual or administrative records, not including data about the number of violations issued or the speeds at which they were issued for, made by a system as confidential, and would only authorize public agencies to use and allow access to these records for specified purposes...